Yauger v. Taylor

118 So. 271, 218 Ala. 235, 1928 Ala. LEXIS 220
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 24, 1928
Docket2 Div. 916.
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 118 So. 271 (Yauger v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yauger v. Taylor, 118 So. 271, 218 Ala. 235, 1928 Ala. LEXIS 220 (Ala. 1928).

Opinions

BOULDIN, J.

The settlement of uncertain or disputed boundaries by proceedings at law, or in equity, has long presented difficult questions to the bar as well as the 'courts of this state.

Cases involving conveyances by government subdivision have been most numerous.

The passing away of the marks of the original surveys by process of time, and clearing up the country, have contributed to un"certainty. Surveys made by course and distance only, as found in the field notes, sometimes relying on traditional starting points, often conflict and add confusion. An’cient boundaries, or traditional corners, set by later surveys, often become of major importance in ascertaining where the original lines were in fact apart from any question of adverse possession. Ford v. Bradford, 212 Ala. 515, 103 So. 549.

As early as McQueen v. Lampley, 74 Ala. 409, Judge Stone pointed out the difficulty of settling a disputed boundary line by ejectment where muniments of title call for government subdivision. If the plaintiff sues by the description in his deed, and defendant pleads not guilty, he admits possession of lands covered by plaintiff’s deed and not his own. If he disclaims the possession of the lands sued for, he cuts himself off from proof of adverse possession, whether it arise by an agreed survey acquiesced in by both parties, by a line pointed out to him, when he purchased, and to which he has held without question for the statutory period, or by any other form of adverse possession recognized by law. On a disclaimer the plaintiff may elect to take judgment without cost. In such event there is no adjudication of the location of the true line, and if the sheriff be sent to put plaintiff in possession, he has no aid from the judgment of the court. Said Judge Stone:

“We submit if there should not be some change of the statute on this subject. Should not a defendant, in a case like the 'present, have equal right with the plaintiff’, who brings him into court, to so plead as to put the question of boundary in issue, and have the jury pass upon it?”

The Code Committee of 1907, by amendment of section 3843, provided that in connection with a disclaimer the defendant may suggest that the suit arises over a disputed boundary line and thus cause the true bound *237 ary to be adjudicated and marked. Some difficulty under that statute was pointed out by Anderson, O. J., in Howard v. Brannan, 188 Ala. 532, 66 So. 433. A further amendment appears in the Code of 1923, § 7457. Is this not a legislative recognition upon judicial suggestion that the remedy at law was theretofore inadequate in such cases?

We turn now to the original jurisdiction in equity to settle uncertain and disputed boundary lines. In Ashurst v. McKenzie, 92 Ala. 484, 9 So. 262, it was said:

“The jurisdiction of chancery to establish disputed boundaries is ancient and well defined. It does not arise upon any mere dispute as to the location of the boundary between adjacent parcels of land, or even upon a mere dispute as to such location of a confused or obliterated line. There must in addition to all this be some special ground of equitable interposition. Such grounds, it is said, may be predicated of the fraud or neglect of duty of the defendant, whereby the confusion and obliteration has resulted; and where the line is marked upon the surface of the ground, and is plowed over and obliterated for the purposes of a fraudulent insistence that it is elsewhere than at its true location; or by a person having at the time possession of his own and the adjoining parcel, and thus being under a duty of maintaining and preserving the demarkation of the two tracts. 3 Pom. Eq. Jur. 1384-5; Wake v. Conyers, 1 Eden Oh. 227; Rous v. Baker, 4 Town P. C. 660; Speer v. Crowters 2 Merio, 410-17; Norris’ Appeal, 64 Pa. 275; Hill v. Proctor, 10 W. Va. 59; Wetherbee v. Dunne, 36 Cal. 249.”

Speaking again of this ancient jurisdiction in Guice v. Barr, 130 Ala. 570, 30 So. 563, it was declared the jurisdiction will be exercised where the line has been obliterated or confused by act of the defendant in fraud of complainant’s rights. Where respondent had sold the land to complainant, failed to point out the line, which had become obliterated, and interfered with a survey of the line by complainant, this was held such fraud as warranted equitable relief. Hays v. Bouchelle, 147 Ala. 212, 41 So. 518, 119 Am. St. Rep. 64.

In Turner v. De Priest, 205 Ala. 313, 87 So. 370, an agreement fixing the line followed by possession and acquiescence for 30 years, and the death of one of the parties, was held to present an estoppel in equity. The controlling factor in fixing the line was possession under the circumstances disclosed.

Statutory provision touching equity jurisdiction in such cases appeared as subdivision 5, section 3052, Code of 1907, reading;

“The powers and jurisdiction of courts of chancery extend— * * *
“5. To establish and define uncertain or disputed boundary lines.”

The first case to come before this court under this statute, we believe, was Davis v. Grant, 173 Ala. 4, 55 So. 210. Without discussion the court considered and affirmed a decree on the express ground that a boundary line had been agreed upon and perfected by. adverse possession.

In later cases, such as Billups v. Gilbert, 195 Ala. 518, 70 So. 145, Chappelear v. Mc-Whorter, 204 Ala. 269, 85 So. 380, and Harley v. Chandler, 204 Ala. 207, 85 So. 546, it was recognized that a bill following the statute was sufficient to confer jurisdiction in the absence of demurrer.

The rule is well established that if a court has no jurisdiction of the subject-matter, its proceedings are void. The parties cannot by agreement confer, jurisdiction in such case. An appeal from such decree will be dismissed. The above decisions cannot be reconciled with the view that a court of equity has no jurisdiction of the subject-matter of settling disputed boundaries; that its jurisdiction must rest alone on an independent equity.

These cases are in entire harmony with the rule that where equity has general jurisdiction over the subject-matter, a defect in the bill, in failing to aver such details as good pleading requires to invoke such jurisdiction, must be raised by demurrer.

In Goodman v. Carroll, 205 Ala. 305, 87 So. 368, on demurrer, it was held the statute of 1907 was merely declaratory of the common law, that a bill must still aver some special equity, and placed the ruling upon the ground that it would otherwise invade the right of trial by jury. This ease was thereafter followed.

Thus matters stood until the Act of October 1, 1923, Acts 1923, p. 764. This statute, as last amended, came up for consideration in Jenkins v. Raulston, 214 Ala. 443, 108 So. 47. As appears from the opinion and more fully from the original record, which has been examined, that case involved six or more acres of lands known as “Woodlawn,” lying between inclosed lands of adjoining proprietors. The bill was filed in two aspects; one invoking the equity jurisdiction at common law; the special equity relied upon being an estoppel by reason of an agreed boundary line acquiesced in for some 30 years. This court held the trial court in error in sustaining a demurrer to that aspect of the bill.

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Bluebook (online)
118 So. 271, 218 Ala. 235, 1928 Ala. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yauger-v-taylor-ala-1928.